Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1950 — Page 3

ET

£

In addition to: the changes

“Heuser, * Father Heuser will’ ‘Tetire from St. Mary's Church, Mitchell, after spending half a century in the priesthood.

Father Heuser will live with his

ceeded at Mitchell by the Rev. FY. 3 Rouck of Bedford. -New Cathedral Head The Rev. Fr. James Galvin, who was born and reared in Indianapolis, will become superintendent of Cathedral High School, Father Galvin will come from the Cath-| olic University, Washington, D. C.| The Rev. Fr. James Moriarty has been transferred to the post of Chaplain of ‘the Convent’ of the

so per ght - or -

OR AMAA A

bi Phe Rev. Fr. Richard Kava-

re —— ——Popling—in- “& {ot

Good the new Fatima Retreat House from Seymour. Father Moriarty is assistant pastor at St. Ambrose’s in Seymour,

» naugh, archdiocesan director .of the Catholic Youth Organization, was named assistant pastor of St. Mary's Church here. =~ The Rev. Fr. Robert Minton will!

STRAUSS

9

SAYS: .

CAPS—IN' THE

PEAK OF FAVOR |

Peak Caps—to protect ‘the head—to control the hair—to shade the eyes— "Perfect" for

of susan Archbisho _ Schulte BE THE REV i

{Wells, St. Philip Neri's, Indian-' apolis, Other appointments include:

Dailey Tells Court,

‘| Indiana State Reformatory.

come from the United States Navy to be assistant pastor of the St. Francis de Sales Church here. The Rev. Fr. Paul Utz has been transferred from St. Fancy lo Church to St. Patrick's here, - The Rev. Fr, James Barton will go from St. Philip's Church here to St. Mary’s of Greensburg. The Rev. Fr. Francis Dooley is transferred from Greensburg to St. Joan's, teaching position. High School. The Rev. Fr. Josep Koster has been transferred from St. Patrick’s to Christ the King and the Rev. Fr. William Buhmeier, from St. Joan's to Seymour, New Priests’ Positions

Newly ordained priests

and 10-8 in Cathedral

and

v. Fr. John 'Minta, St. Patrick’s, Terre Haute; the Rev. Fr. Albert Ajamie, St. Andrew's, Indianapolis; the Rev. Fr. Edward Gayso, St. Paul's, Tell City; the Rev. Fr. Ralph Hoffman, St. Mary's, New Albany; the Rev. Fr. Bernard Voges, Holy Trinity, ! Indianapolis; the Rev. Fr. John|

The Rev. Fr. Sylvester Bloemke, from 8t. Peter's, Franklin County,

their first appo are. Th Bhépherd “and director of Re B-appointimenia he.that. Branch.

oo be two admissions for the two games. Mr. Chandler, in ordering the cancellation, sald the ' conflict with religious services and the of the Sunday doubleheader—presenting two games for one admission—gave him “no alternative.” The Brooklyn Dodgers have played morning and afternoon; games with separate admissions, but never on Sundays. There was considerable protest about the Sunday night game at| St. Louis, and one report was Rickey... president. of, the Dodgers, refused to play. However, as late as last night, | President Saigh of the Cardinals insisted the game would ‘bo on| as planned, and Mr. Rickey refused to comment on his feelings,

Lottery Case

to Bedford; the Rev. Fr. Joseph Laugel from St. Anne's, Jennings County, to Franklin County; the Rev. Fr. Carl Sahm, from St.

{

County,

Fix Charge False,

|

Policeman Protests Indictment Dismissal.

(Continued From Page

him $10 and costs and sentenced him to one to 10 years in the

Police said Johnson told them

sportsmen (and _ sportswomen}—who participate—or spectate!

(You will see hundreds _of them at the Royalton Steeplechase Tomorrow)

Gabardines and

of colors.

%

{that Mr. Rappaport knew when

| nearly $1300, that they had been { stolen.

he bought the goods, valued at

Changed Story . After the indictment was returned against Mr. Rappaport Johnson changed his story and! admitted that the loan official had

‘| no knowledge that he was buying _|stolen property.

Ra ha said he Thvoived Mr. |

HEten ro sentence.”

With attached sun visor glasses they're .

Without glasses— $101.9

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STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF

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domestic ALLIGATOR

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(Father's Day)

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them up to size “They are shown

about every leather that o good belt can he be made of<—narrow and wider widths—a swell range of colors —prices begin ot

1.50. There is a

super selection at

3.50 ond 3.75

4 + | |

The prosecution eoOmmMcndod a suspended sentence for Johnson.. Prosecutor Dailey told the] court that he had received a call

{who said it “looked like a fix.” “This call was unprecedented in my term in office. Sgt. Ratz and another officer said we should insist on the maximum penalty for Johnson under the circum-| stances; ” Mr. Dalley said. “He should be treated as any! other first offender.”

summer months.

DEAR SIR:— An ELASTIC BELT* FROM: PARIS

—will do your midsection proud—but comfortable!

~{*Maybe we should use-the plural... | member—"belts' .members of men who are not content | with, just one belt—they buy RSE

Prosecutor George Dailey today filed supplemental records to com{plete the appeal in cases of five|

Michael's, Charleston, to Jennings! {Indianapolis men named in lottery’ 'down the road to war. The first

indictments. Today's action will complete an appeal carried by the prosecutor's) {office to Indiana Supreme Court after the indicted men’s motions quash the cases were sustained] Fg Criminal Court 1. A decision in the 15-month- old case is expected before the Su-| preme Court adjourns for the! §

* Defendants named in the in-

(dictments. are Thomas. McNulty,

attorney; his brother, Edward McNulty, tavern owner; Ralph Hitch, former professional bondsman; Willlam Miller, attorney, and Hugh Flynn, accountant. The original indictments were returned by the grand jury Feb. 17, 1949, and the motion to quash them was sustained Apr. 28, 1949; Judge William D. Bain held that the ‘indictments were not teeh-| nically correct.

Ol' Man Heat To Extend Stay

“Tndianapoli®

premature “sum-|

hot day today. The Weather Bureau warned the mercury was to reach 88 dns afternoon in war m, humid weather. Scattered thundershow- |

from Detective Sgt. Arthur Ratz, ers late today and tomorrow will

not prevent temperatures from| climbing to 88 again tomorrow, | the bureau said. ! A thirsty Indianapolis consumed | 63.5 million gallons of water yes-| terday, compared to 63 million | {the day before. Yesterday's amount was the highest this ) year, {but no ali-time record. |

| TOMORROW! |

|

{

1

BRAIDED

‘for there are

2 or more at first sight—

fine

There are a number of colors—and

or come back soon for another and L another after buying one. They want variety without foregoing | the exclusive comfort of such belts.)

color combinations—and braid

52.

in,

CL —

5 EXTRA ~ L'Aiglon {meaning belts — ONE-PIEC

__. L STRAUSS & CO., THE MAN'S STORE

A PREser

techniques. You tighten it—as you wish—the buckle fastens wherever you

choose to fasten it. Sizes up to 46—.

: SUSPENDERS — from the fine French source,

- {his IS really something) 3.95 me

hs ok PB - : 5 :

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alt

little eagle) that makes the E, braided, all-elastic— -

| ceremony.

“ito the end of 1948, three troubled

ithe drive toward establishing?

| Klementi

rg ———————e lt rp

ene ———— or —————

—————

Ai fo Soy 1 Do Wilh del

arms swinging in perfect time with | wt wits wr he rie Fg the-mensured-Dest-of-the- wad. + STING FCePtion TRH RAE SV them off on a two-week motor. trip, during which Jimmy will do most of the driving. Mr,

ding march. At the altar the 25-year-old | quadruple amputee, one of the | two World War II heroes who ‘lost all four limbs and’ lived, married Dorothy Mortenson, 23, a beautiful television model who encouraged his long struggle back from war's lying grave yard; Jacksonville, which had taken Jimmy to its heart, did its best | ~forhis p day. The Wome | en's Club auditorium was | | |

sity of Florida. period that followed the 1944

Force bomber.

| rooned for three days in the banked with flowers in a deco- | snow-laden Vermont mountains, ration job hastily completed after rain threatened to spoil |

| the planned outdoor garden

and legs froze and had to be amputated.

. CC ; { learn to dance, operate a type. MAYOR. HAYDEN BURNS | writer, comb his hair with artiwas among the 400 guests who i ficial limbs.

a SA Former Ne an Official To Tell Times Readers All

Series Starting Sunday Will Describe How Reds March Down Road to War

By Soripps-Howard Newspapers

Dr. Nicholas Nyaradi,

{Times and other Scripps-Howard Newspapers, Titled, “Ringside Seat In Russia.”

and how she marches warily ™

“I ‘promptly resigned my post,

{article will appear in The Times he said, i Sunday.

Dr. Nyaradi spent seven seizure of American interest

{months in Moscow negotiating gesiqes, I was gravely disturbed {by the pending arrest of Cardinal] I was | Communjsts grabbed Hungary.|.onvinced that Russia was plan-| (Perhaps better than any other|ning an aggressive war against

with top Russian officials on be-

{half of his country before the | Mindszenty, and finally,

{non-Communist, he gained an in- (he free world.” {sight of what is in the minds of | Fi U i > the 14 men of the Politburo con-| rst U. 8. Visit in 192¢ trolling Russia's destiny. i ine recent interview-4he {handsome

papers: “From the beginning of 1946

years of post-war history, I had Was in 1026. He spent a fe

a ringside seat from where I months in Boston and acquired) was able to observe closely many the groundwork for the faultless

of the Soviet moves toward English he now speaks. {world domination.

of a coalition government

Hungary, formed on the princi- {United States. As Under Secre-| ples laid down by the Big Three tary. of Finance he visited Wash- by high-ranking Justice Departat Yalta, I watched Soviet Rus-|in8ton to discuss economic mat- ment officials that OSS agents sia violate all her obligations in ters with the State Department./entered the offices of Amerasial On : Stier Ste thie we nd recouer TIegaly in an effort to! JOW at he has his wife and recover the stolen papers, thu paport, “thinking it ‘would mer heat-wave rolled into its third Communist influence throughout “whole nant

| American-born ‘son with him,

. bac Dr. Nyaradi went to Moscow has ¥o.. plans or Song yee.

to settle Russian reparations) claims against Hungary. In ‘that! time he met with top Soviet offi-| cials, eluding Deputy Prime Minister Molotov, Deputy Prime | Minister Mikoyan and ‘Marshal | Voroshilov, all mem-| ry 5 bers of the Politburo. I The Russians wanted $200 mil-! lion from Hungary. Dr. Nyaradi succeeded in getting their claim | down to $45 million.

“This $155 million reduction,” he said, was probably one of the | few successes ever acheived by a non-Communist against the tough, guys of the Kremlin.” In 1948 Dr. Nyarad! was on a | official trip to Paris when he re-| a ceived news that the Communist! | majority. of the Hungarian cabi-| net had taken advantage of his tabsence to confiscate all Ameri-| can property In “Hunggry. ; |

STRAU SS SAYS:

‘YOUR TRIP ABROAD’ | Guide to Bargain | . . Tour of Europe / SU NDAY TIMES i i

STRAUSS

SAYS: | | ly

HE —e . » v - FOR A SHORT NAP LE Wi | ~' These are the PAJAMAS fons won AQ HOOP Y OU COO mm when the nights 2% POWER get hot. SPORTS GLASS { THE KNEE-LENGTH pajamas have a 3.50 (Plus Tax) ih button front—no collar (that's nice— it means.a cool neck}—also middies A compact—easy-to- —{short sleeves). There are plain shades— carry Field Glass— and fine looking prints. A lightweight fo give you a betier view texture technically called skip dent without going the that has alternating open and wallet out of focus— , They're closed stripes— Made by -AirGuide—one COTTON = of the top names in the They're 3. 50-3. 1-3 95+ precision instrument WASHABLE field. They're THE LONGER LEGGED , PF ; GIVE- . sleep inducers have regular length Yo Jvauld have time fo | ABLE* sleeves and slacks—slipover or coat drop-in before Po apne styles—skip dent weaves the ROYALTON Father's STEEPLECHASE tomorrow. Day—is 3 95 i on the way. :

Complete with case 3.50 plus tax oe = ] : 2 3 in solid L SRAUSS& 0. | SPORTSMAN'S ~ ROOM SiH FLOOR

+35 i o STRAUSS & (0.

Wilson met his bride while he was studying for a’ pre-law degree at the Univer He was then arrest of the six Amerasia defengoing through the readjustment [dants. This order, according to training flight crash of an Air Mr. Wilson, the only survivor ! of the nine-man crew. Was maBefore help arrived, his arms

Miss Mortenson helped him

former Finance Minister of Hungary

i Appeal Advanced and now an exile in America from the Communist regime of that {country, has written a series of five articles for The Indianapolis | they are new and revealing

| disclosures—from the insidé-—of what Russia is doing in Europe |

“and went into volun- no (tary exile. I had opposed the sought to cover up on the case.

{cal Science and Doctor of Law. he testified last Tuesday before His first trip to the United States the New York federal grand jury

His. appointment as Finance justic Department claims that il“As a non-Communist member Minister came in 1947 when he {legal O88 raids Jorpedong proseir! was on his second ‘trip to the cution of the case.

TRADITION WITH A TOUCH. OF TOMORROW

A KNIT:

a comforting pajama—that cools and absorbs— :

‘to the late Secretary of Defense, {it should be subpenaed amd ¢X~| ARISE BY" “fhe Bente Relations subcommittee investi-

tion. D down of

Hb gis _—-., : Apueently_-lsclated Knowland Asks Data

JAS Fla, June 9 (UP)—Smiling Jimmy Wil On Probie y y Wilson | i B. aid "in 1s 1" ust ike Fe aod 10 Go Tefore na ny Fores mission, +, IConttnues Sion Fuge Oubs Creek bridge . last night and then he was off on the greatest adventure of his life— Sdn of the 1848 Amerasia while fishing with ber husband. HE u 7 The handsome young law student, resplendent in a summer a Rowland tid the Sante a hat rating In 3 Hirie bi Lo : potie En) A aed 1 ih Friant H _ He said that “in fairness” ties by tw 16-year-old youths 45 . theater and escaped

Only last month the Conserva- $100 last . orde TR ‘shooting tis Sturt

{gating the Amerasia case, | The subcommittee has been told | that temporary stop order—al|legedly emanating from the White [House—was issued. prior to the

President Truman himself. Ended Own Life Sen. Knowland sald that Mr.

Pr testimony, was. overruled by

a year ago, has been bro in{to the Amerasia stolen documents case, “Mr. Forrestal is not here to state his reasons--if he did sug[Best that the arrests be delayed ~but there is a diary in the White | House that can speak for Mr. Forrestal,” Sen. Knowland said. —The--subcommittee, headed hy. zen. Millard E. Tydings (D. Md. ie. |has authority to subpena docu-| {ments needed for its investigation. | | But thus far, the executive agen-| eles have declined to henor its |subpenias. | Meanwhile, the investigating subcommittee questioned Archbold Van Beuren, who was the ‘wartime Office of Strategic Servfces security officer who author{ized the initial raid on the Amerlasia offices,

Imembers declined to reveal the nature of his testimony today. | But the witness, now a New York "magazine publisher, sald, that he longer felt the committee

Called By Grand Jury Some days age Mr. Van Beuren informed Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, (R. Wis.) that preliminary {questioning by committee staff investigators indicated an effort to use him to break down the {testimony given earlier by Frank

.

| Bielaski, the OSS officer who ac-|-Dr, Nyaradi was born in Buda- tually 1éd the first raid on the {he-tail Dest. He studied at the Universi: Hungarian diplomat ty of Budapest and was awarded told the Scripps-Howard News- the degrees of Doctor in Politi-

Amerasia offices, PTH TONE Have that Amipress: gion,” Mr. Van Beuren said. Mr, Van Beuren revealed that

Ww whieh is again Investigating the

I another development 088 {officials sald that there is “no {foundation in fact or in law” for

They took issue with testimony

Iorrestal who committed suleldel. 0 :

Mr. Van Beuren and committee :

STRAUSS SAYS:

FOR SPORTS IT'S STRAUSSH

FATHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY, JUNE 18, AND

TS NYLON, SR ~~ | THEPRICEIS 1250 + |

It's all NYLON——and it's light in weight os it's wind and water repellent to sn el

a man plenty of protection-tand yet retain its good looks! .

hon case,

TOP PAJAMA shades—with skip dent slacks—

EE

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}

o

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The narrow. shape ~— ties in serfeilly with the new "pin collar" Shirt— and at the same fime these ties have added length (about 54 inches long) to appeal to a man who likes to tie | .a Windsor knot— ; aL without running out of necktie! -

290. na al

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L. STRAUSS &€0, ._ THE MANS STORE

0